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Jen Parrish gave me permission to visit her online sites to select images to use as illustration for her interview responses.  As I did with other interviewees in 2012, I asked Jen to share how music inspires her artwork.  Viewing her artwork inspired me.   I had only to see an item described as “Gothic architecture meets nature” to know how appropos it was that she and I met through an art and architecture department in a Romanesque church.

She is an elegant, soft-spoken woman with a piercing gaze and gentle words.  It took me a while to learn that she is also a renowned jewelry designer whose handcrafted pieces are worn by celebrities and other people around the world.  Without ever having seen Jen work firsthand, I have only to listen as she speaks about her work to feel her dedication to beauty.  I expect everyone who purchases one of her unique pieces must know they carry part of Jen, and more than a bit of world history, with them.  I am very grateful she responded to my questions.   Please read her interview here.  I think you’ll find both the words and images quite interesting.

fragile beauty

There is a time and place for everything.  I guess now is a time and place in my life to collect seashells and rocks and blossoms that I let dry in the sun.  As I collect these things, I ponder.  Here is a recent essay inspired by a broken bowl of stone and shells:  fragile beauty.

the lily lessons

I’m not sure when or where I purchased the bulb.  In early spring, I was buying stuff to plant at every venue, from fancy nurseries to the Dollar Store.  I remember that I found the bulb one day in the bottom of a crumpled bag.  It’s label was gone.  I still planted it by itself in an orange clay pot.  Nothing happened for the longest time.  I had to practice my patience skills big time.  Then one day, green shoots appeared.  A lovely dark green.  An amaryllis perhaps?  But then the leaves unfurled revealing white spots, providing me with just enough information for some internet research.  As the leaves grew tall and spread wide, I kept wondering when the heck would the flower appear.  And then one day it did.

It has been fun to photograph, and hard.  There are things I see with my eyes that I have yet to capture exactly as I wish with the camera. Variations in color and texture, all of which continue to evolve as the plant grows.

That forgotten bulb at the bottom of a bag has turned into a very lovely learning experience.

 

The fluff of the cottonwood tree filled the air like snow and coated the surface of the pond.  Plus there was the pollen, pond algae and the dust stirred up by the adjacent construction project.

Maybe the little fellow was trying to cool off because it was in the waters closest to shore and so there was also the reflection of the trees in the water.  But how long could he remain obscured with that beautiful bronze shell?

in that woburn field

More images from that field and stream bed next to an office park in Woburn, Massachusetts where I’ve had the pleasure of photographing in Fall, Winter and now in Spring.  I hope that I am able to return in Summer.

resting

Would you believe I was restless this morning?  Probably the two cups of strong coffee.  I could not settle down to work with words or images.  Finally I began picking through a box with writing from years past — letters never mailed, musings, unfinished stories, etc.  I forgot to date the paper, but I expect the following piece was written around Father’s Day nearly fifteen years ago.  I probably wrote it while sitting on the back porch of my childhood home in Virginia.  After reading the words, would you believe I felt grounded?

Seasons

The sun shines bright and a cool breeze blows.  Spring has not yet arrived but I feel the change in the air.

Spring arrives and yet my father’s vegetable garden lies fallow.  Let it rest as he now rests.  His long journey has ended.

Let the land rest.  Rest your head, child. Sit still for it is the day of rest.  A verb that is used so often.  What does it mean, to rest?

A rest in music. A rest between words on paper.

To let your heart rest …

Resting seems scary somehow right now.

If one does rest, is it possible to pause for too long?  If so, what will quicken the heart, the spirit?   Will it be the sun’s rays, a cool breeze against bare skin, a lover’s lips?  Perhaps a bird’s song.

What if there is no breeze, no sun, no lover?

There are plenty of birds, though, even in the empty garden.  I suppose there are still seeds there beneath the earth.

What are those seeds doing there?

Well, I suppose my father would say that they are resting.

Yes, resting is what he would say.

The seeds are resting in the arms of the Earth awaiting their chance to grow.

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Nine minutes.  That’s all the time I had to walk through the Church of the Convenant before the doors would be closed for the day.  Located in Boston’s Back Bay on Newbury Street, the church is famed for its interior design work and stained glass windows by Tiffany Glass and Decorating Company.  The opportunity to photograph just a bit of this interior arose the same wonderfully rainy day I had my photographic adventures in the Boston Public Library.

You can read more about Church of the Convenant’s architecture and artwork via this link.

but actually just water running over rocks in a little stream in Woburn.

Following are pictures taken of the John Singer Sargent murals located on the top floor of the McKim Building at the Boston Public Library.  You can read more about the murals creation and restoration here and here.